“No $urprise” The Bankers are backing Hillary Clinton and Jeb Bush

It seems like only yesterday (because it was) that we reported that Hillary Clinton was bankrolled by Wall Street—and now we get the unsurprising news that Bush III is also financed by everyone’s favorite buyer of elections (sarcasm intended).

Yes, Jeb Bush is currently bank-rolled by none other than Goldman Sachs, the biggest purchaser of political influence in recent times.

“More than 50 Goldman Sachs executives and employees gave the Republican more than $144,000 in the second quarter, with most of them sending $2,700, the maximum allowed, according to Federal Election Commission filings.”

I guess we know where Jebby’s alliances will lie in the event that he wins the 2016 presidential election.

However, let’s not act like the Republicans have a monopoly on Goldman Sachs money. Sure, Mitt Romney benefited most from them in 2012. But Goldman was the second largest fundraiser for Barack Obama in 2008, as well.

In fact, as I noted above, Hillary Clinton—another establishment favorite for 2016—is also benefiting greatly from the Big Banks. According to Bloomberg,

“Goldman Sachs employees sent more to Bush than to Hillary Clinton, who got less than $60,000. Even so, she received more than him from donors at JPMorgan and Morgan Stanley, where her former State Department deputy Tom Nides is vice chairman. He’s among bundlers who helped her raise at least $100,000.”

Banksters 2016, anyone? I mean, that’s basically the only choice we’re currently given by the corporate media and political establishment. From the news coverage to date, you’d think that there are only three candidates in the running for 2016: Hillary Clinton, Jeb Bush, and racist idiot Donald Trump. But are there other options that aren’t shoe-ins for the oligarchy? Maybe.

For the corporate parties, you have Republican Rand Paul and Democrat Bernie Sanders. Both candidates talk a relatively good game, but both also make questionable statements and have suspect voting records, demonstrating they are—at least partially—in line with the rest of the political establishment. Nevertheless, both candidates have called for (and voted to bring) transparency to the Federal Reserve. They have also both shown willingness to challenge foreign policy in one way or another. Both have relatively strong track records of taking on the corrupted monetary and criminal “justice” systems—but there are even better options.

For these, we will have to step outside of the two-party duopoly.

The Green party has a great option in Jill Stein, who I’ve personally met and conversed with. She says she would reign in the financial system and would “break up the big banks and bail out the students,” repatriate the Federal Reserve to the people, end all wars, and protect the U.S. environment from Big Oil and other corporate exploits.

The Libertarian Party has a viable option in Gary Johnson, should he decide to run (he probably will “unless something catastrophic happens“). He believes in ending the Federal Reserve, reigning in out-of-control foreign policy, ending most foreign aid, instituting tax and immigration reform, and allowing young people to opt-out of entitlements like Social Security.

Both of these candidates are MUCH better than the choices being spoon-fed to us, which invariably have an (R) or a (D) next to their names. But what can we do beyond voting to actively resist oligarchy?

1980: George Bush Senior elected as vice-president, under Ronald Reagan

1988: George Bush Senior elected as president

1992: Bill Clinton defeats George Bush Senior to be elected president

1995: George W Bush becomes governor of Texas

1996: Bill Clinton becomes the second Democrat in history to win a second term, after Franklin D Roosevelt

1999: Jeb Bush becomes governor of Florida

2001: George W Bush succeeds Bill Clinton as president, becoming one of only two presidents who are the son of a former president (John Quincy Adams is the other)

2006: The families are jointly awarded the Philadelphia Liberty Medal for their work on the Bush-Clinton Katrina Fund and Bush-Clinton Tsunami Fund

2008: Hillary Rodham Clinton runs for the Democratic nomination for president, but loses to an unknown senator from Illinois – Barack Obama

2009: Hillary Clinton made secretary of state by Obama

2013: Hillary Clinton steps down as secretary of state, but is widely expected to be running for president in 2016. As she teases on the penultimate page of her biography Hard Choices: “The answer is, I haven’t decided yet.”

2014: Jeb Bush announces on Facebook and Twitter that he is “exploring the possibility of running for president” in 2016

2015: Hillary Clinton and Jeb Bush both announce they will run in the 2016 presidential election